Authors
Emily B Graham, Joseph E Knelman, Andreas Schindlbacher, Steven Siciliano, Marc Breulmann, Anthony Yannarell, JM Beman, Guy Abell, Laurent Philippot, James Prosser, Arnaud Foulquier, Jorge C Yuste, Helen C Glanville, Davey L Jones, Roey Angel, Janne Salminen, Ryan J Newton, Helmut Bürgmann, Lachlan J Ingram, Ute Hamer, Henri MP Siljanen, Krista Peltoniemi, Karin Potthast, Lluís Bañeras, Martin Hartmann, Samiran Banerjee, Ri-Qing Yu, Geraldine Nogaro, Andreas Richter, Marianne Koranda, Sarah C Castle, Marta Goberna, Bongkeun Song, Amitava Chatterjee, Olga C Nunes, Ana R Lopes, Yiping Cao, Aurore Kaisermann, Sara Hallin, Michael S Strickland, Jordi Garcia-Pausas, Josep Barba, Hojeong Kang, Kazuo Isobe, Sokratis Papaspyrou, Roberta Pastorelli, Alessandra Lagomarsino, Eva S Lindström, Nathan Basiliko, Diana R Nemergut
Publication date
2016/2/24
Journal
Frontiers in microbiology
Volume
7
Pages
214
Publisher
Frontiers Media SA
Description
Microorganisms are vital in mediating the earth’s biogeochemical cycles; yet, despite our rapidly increasing ability to explore complex environmental microbial communities, the relationship between microbial community structure and ecosystem processes remains poorly understood. Here, we address a fundamental and unanswered question in microbial ecology: ‘When do we need to understand microbial community structure to accurately predict function?’ We present a statistical analysis investigating the value of environmental data and microbial community structure independently and in combination for explaining rates of carbon and nitrogen cycling processes within 82 global datasets. Environmental variables were the strongest predictors of process rates but left 44% of variation unexplained on average, suggesting the potential for microbial data to increase model accuracy. Although only 29% of our datasets were significantly improved by adding information on microbial community structure, we observed improvement in models of processes mediated by narrow phylogenetic guilds via functional gene data, and conversely, improvement in models of facultative microbial processes via community diversity metrics. Our results also suggest that microbial diversity can strengthen predictions of respiration rates beyond microbial biomass parameters, as 53% of models were improved by incorporating both sets of predictors compared to 35% by microbial biomass alone. Our analysis represents the first comprehensive analysis of research examining links between microbial community structure and ecosystem function. Taken together, our results …
Total citations
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